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Bosworth-field

With a Taste of the Variety of Other Poems, Left by Sir John Beaumont ... Set Forth by his Sonne, Sir Iohn Beaumont
 

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In spirituall comfort.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


78

In spirituall comfort.

Enough delight, O mine eternall good!
I feare to perish in this fiery flood:
And doubt, lest beames of such a glorious light
Should rather blind me, then extend my sight:
For how dare mortals here their thoughts erect
To taste those ioyes, which they in heau'n expect?
But God inuites them in his boundlesse loue,
And lifts their heauy minds to things aboue.
VVho would not follow such a pow'rfull guide
Immid'st of flames, or through the raging tide?
VVhat carelesse soule will not admire the grace
Of such a Lord, who knowes the dang'rous place
In which his seruants liue; their natiue woes,
Their weake defence, and fury of their foes:
And casting downe to earth these golden chaines,
From hels steepe brinke their sliding steps restraines?
His deare affection flies with wings of haste;
He will not stay till this short life be past:
But in this vale where teares of griefe abound,
He oft with teares of ioy his friends hath drown'd.
Man, what desir'st thou? wouldst thou purchase health,
Great honour, perfect pleasure, peace and wealth?

79

All these are here, and in their glory raigne:
In other things these names are false and vaine.
True wisdome bids vs to this banquet haste,
That precious Nectar may renew the taste
Of Edens dainties, by our parents lost
For one poore Apple, which so deare would cost,
That eu'ry man a double death should pay,
But mercy comes the latter stroke to stay,
And (leauing mortall bodies to the knife
Of Iustice) striues to saue the better life.
No sou'raigne med'cine can be halfe so good
Against destruction, as this Angels food,
This inward illustration, when it finds
A seate in humble, and indiff'rent minds.
If wretched men contemne a Sunne so bright,
Dispos'd to stray, and stumble in the night,
And seeke contentment where they oft haue knowne
By deare experience, that there can be none.
They would much more neglect their God, their end,
If ought were found whereon they might depend,
Within the compasse of the gen'rall frame:
Or if some Sparkes of this Celestiall flame
Had not ingrau'd this sentence in their brest:
In him that made them is their onely rest.